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i HE NAT?ON/IL BARK OF AUGUSTA
L. C. HAYNS, Prea't. F. G. FORD, Cashier.
{ ?pita!, $250,000.
Undivided Profita } ?110,000.
, Facilillos of our mapnl?lcont Now Vault
con t.il ni ii jr -1!0 ?-afoty-Lock BOXPS. Dlffer
Sizr-s ari' oCb??d to our patrons and
*.!io public at ?3xo to 810.00. por annum.
ll S ^
THE
PLANTERS
LOAN AND
SAVINGS
BANK,
R AUGUSTA, GA.
I_
Pays Interest
on Deposits.
Accounts
Solicited.
L. C. Kayne,
President.
Chas. C. Howard,
Cashier.
VOL. LXVII.
EBGEFIELD, S. C.. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 5. 1902.
NO. 45
THE LAS
PHOTOGRAPH 3Y C. E. Bf OWN, EAS
?P. S. S. "VERMONT," A RELIC
'Remains of Pizarro, Fit o?
; iii. lill C8H8? Of
' ' ISO lit ?41G3S.
"
i ? ? H
By E; C. Rest.
IC fhe fa'.??ous-ancient cathedral of
Luna, Tem, nr?-on exhibition the
remains of Captain-General Don
Francisco Pizarro, who founded Li
ma January IS. 1535. These remains
are contained iu a white marble carlin,
with a glass front, thus exposing to
view the well preserved remains with
in. The coffin stands in a niche or
more properly a vault, entrance to
Which is had through a massive iron
barred door. To view tlK'se remains
one must'fall into thc good graces of
an attendant in thc cathedral, AVIIO for
one sol (fifty cents) opens the iron
doors, 'lights a candle and hy this
light the remains arc examined.
It whs my ambition to obtain a pho
tograph of these remains, perhaps of
greater historic interest than\all else
{n South America. Pissarro was at once
the founder of Lima (if riot of South
America!, conqueror of the ancient and
highly civilized Incas, and may bo re
garded as ono of the most .brutal of all
warriors. It required some very strong
influence to procure "the desired per
mission, uiuL.it. was ?only after an ar*
iry;. toi'iiu? Peru
vian Legation in Washington, that the
necessary permission was finally
granted.
v Owing in the poor light in the vault
I was obliged to give The plate two and
TUE REMAINS OF
one-half hours' exposure, with thc re
sult herewith shown". Several rolls:of
parchment manuscript visible near the
foot of the body are also contained
withiu tl;e marble cor??v.. which was
placed where it nov. stands in 1891.
Pizarro was killed in the palace at
Lima June 2G. 1541, and his remains
were previously buried in a subterra
nean vault of thc old cathedral.
Tturial Places of PiosiUcnte.
Under the portico of the First Church
at Quiney, Mass., rest the two illus
trious men whom the Bay State gave
JOHN ADAMS AND JOHN QUINCY ADAMS.
? to the Presidency-John Adams, and
. his son. Jolin Quincy Adams. The
: vaults are invisible, but there are rr eui
. orial tablets In the church.
An Immense coal li;:?d, 4U0 square j
miles Ul extent, lies ISO miles north
west of Bulawayo, South Africa.. Lt is !
. said that tlie coal bed is only forty feet)
below the surface in many places.
There are seventeen thousand stat
utes in British statute law. Thirty
volumes are yearly added to the Law
Reports.
rr OF THE
rPORT, MAINE.
O F OUR EARLY NAVAL GLORY, B
TO MEASURE THE SERMON.
Hour-Glass<>B Still Found In Some Old
English Churches
Very few tibor 'glasses BOW linger in
country churches, tor they ceased to" be
in anything like gei.?ral use after the
Restoration, says the Golden Penny
ANCIENT SE1UIOX MEASURE.
best-preserved ."glasses" is still to be
seen in the. Church, of ..St Mary, at
Beckley, Oxon, where it controlled the
length of pulpit discourses for many a
Jy the aid of the hour glass tb? _
hers of a congregation could u?i^jr
themselves as to whether their-'worthy
pastor was giving them citherTong or
short measure iu the way of sevinons,
and, in truth, it was deemed little less
?than a scandal if-the preacher ceased
FRANCISCO PIZARRO.
j Uis homily before the last grain of sand
had dropped into thc; nether globe. The
story runs that on one occasion, when
rumor reached the preacher's ears that
his Sock considered Iiis sermons scan
dalously abridged, the worthy divine
reversed the glass no fewer than four
ga rt ITs "Sleeping Congregation," on
the left-hand side of the preacher.
Strange, too, was the custom " asso
ciated with long sermons, its object
being to rousft the congregation from
times, the congregation meanwhile,,
marking the expiration of each allotted
time by hopefully reaching,for their
hats. It may be noticed that one of
these monitory-horologes figures in Ho
profound slumber. A long wand, with
an end shaped like-a-hay fork, was car
ried round the church by a beadle,
whose duty it was to Jog the sleeping
member in the nape of the neck, und
effectually break the spell. Indeed,
many individu?is set aside their sav
ings in order tc support this custom of
keeping the congregation awake.
-I. ur Uv St, I/ncln. ;
. Perhaps the most extraordinary phe
nomenon which presents itself iu con
nection with the volcanic eruptions at
Martinique and St. Vincent is that St.
Lucia.'.lying between the tAvo islands,
and only about forty miles distant from
the seat of seismic distill bancos on
either side, bas never ex-* rieneed Hie
slightest tremor, nor have any but the
faintest sounds been bean! by a few
persons: and only once, for a few
hours, has the fall of ashes caused
darkness to the extent of inconveni
ence. Tills ls all the more remarkable
in that from St. Kite's southward Jo
Trinidad, haye distinct earth rumblings
been experienced, and loud d?tonations
beard. Yet the electrical phenomena,
especially when Moni Pelee has been
active, can be distinctly seen from
here.-Th* Voice of St. Lucia.
More deaths from snake-bites occur
in India in bouses than in the lields
or in liip jungle.
WOODEN
i
EIN G BROKEN UP FOR JUNK A 'J
TYING HORSES
TO SAND HOLES
An Effective Device Used by t,he In
dians of t>he Desert?.
Tying one's boise to ti hole in the
ground is a strange proceeding, and to
the uninitiated seems impossible, bul
In the great California deserts. With
their vast saud wastes and alkaline
beds, where neither trees nor shrub*
have courage to grow, and where
sticks and even stones refuse to exist,
the demand for some efficacious
method of hitching animals has been
imperative.
The white man, with all his ingen
uity, has always found the question
of anchoring his horse on the desert
to bc au enigma.
Fear and necessity compel the desert
traveler to keep in motion, for thc
sun is relentless and treacherous, as
is thc vulture that hovers above with
an anxious gleam of expectation in its
eyes.
Over miles and milos of burning,
pathless sands he may bo doomed to
wander whik* thc sun pursues with
heated vigilance. His horse is his only
companion, the only llviug thing lie
sides himself in the great heartless
pluin, and he clings to it for safety as
a captain clings to his ship.
If nature rebels against the struggle,
and the traveler must rest, the only
DESERT INDIAN TYING HIS HOUSE TO A
HOLE.
a brief sleep is to tie the halter rope
around his arm, his leg or his body.
Au animal requires a proportion of
water equal to that of man, and be
comes crazed if his thirst is not
quenched. In such cases he is liable
to plunge and careen wildly away over
the sands like a ship in a iialo, drag
ging his human anchor to destruction
and death.
Such has been the experience ol' the
white man, but the desert Indians,
who have never been accredited with
superabundant wits, have for many
years employed a mel hod that is clever,
unique and effective-that of fastening
their animals to holes in the ground.
During a recent trip to tho desert a
photographer caught an Indian in the
very act. and for thc first time a photo
was taken that illustrates the scheme.
: Kneeling on tho hot sand, thc Indian
began to dig with his hands, which
were as hard and tough and imper
vious to pain as a dog's paws. He
worked energetically until lie had
made a bolo about two feet deep. Ile
then tied an immense knot to the end
of the halter rope, lowered it into
the bottom of the hole, lilied thc hole
with snnd, and then jumped and
stamped upon it till the earth over
the knot was about as solid as the
rock of Gibraltar.-Chicago Record
Herald.
Wedding Onv?? Itor Food.
A wedding took place :it the Cathe
dral the other day, and liberal showers
of rice were thrown upon the happy
couple as they left the church. After
the carriages had rolled away a de
crepit old woman, who had been seated
on a bench in Logan Square, watching
the gay scene in front of the church
hobbled up to the great stone steps,
and, getting down on lier knees, began
tO/.brusb up the grains of rice that had
been thrown at the bride and groom.
' Patiently the woman toiled over her
task, carefully gathering up each grain
into a ragged handkerchief. She gath
ered up a pound or more ol' tile smooth,
white grains, which sin.' tied up hy the
corners of her handkerchief, and then
she limped off with evident pleasure at
the food supply that had so unexpect
edly come to her.-Philadelphia Rec
ord.
Traveling Four Yours to liny Snuff.
The East Greeulaiulers journey
around to West Greenland to gel san ff,
und will consume four years in a single
excursion there and bark, often, ac
cording lo Nansen, remaining nu longer
than an hour at the trading station lie
fore taking up their homeward march.
Ireland's people commit fewer small
offences than those ol' any other coun
try. Last year there was a further
diminution of 10.2 per cent, in minot
offences.
WALLS.
C BROAD COVE. EA SITO UT, ME.
-From Collier's Weekly.
A Fire Ahum Whistle Itlotm hy Ons.
One cf our correspondents, Mr. J. n
Ritchie, of Cherryvale, Kan., has sem
us an interesting photograph of th(
FIEE ALAltM WHISTLE orE HATED E
1,'AXUKAL GAS.
lire alarm whistle used by tbe Pionee
Fire Company of that city. This whis
tie is blown by natural gas furnisher
by a local gas company. It is said t
be Hie ??lily one of its kind, and can b
beard several miles. One of thc ga
wells Mows 13,000.000 cubic feet a daj
and is now considered thc stranges
well in thc Kansas gas Held. Natura
gas is also used for fuel, for lightin;
tho city, and is also ihe only fuel usei
by zinc smelters employing 300 band:
mid hy two vitriilcd brick planls.
Scicutific American.
Spmivnker who Never Wean R Hut.
In a shipyard across thc river fron
Bangor, Me., works Moody Brown
who is said to be the oldest and bes
spnrmnker In thc United States. II?
was born in 1820. and bas handled tin
adze since he was a boy. Mr. P.rowi
AI? .fe^v-.!,;^,.., _?t\
ill 1 j hW\t?S ?Tn
.Moody, Hie oilier day. "hut I'm ol some
nyc to tlic world yet. My grandfather
lived to be 1.13 years of age. and Avas
smart to the last. At one time I
thought I should equal his record, but
now I think he'll brnt.ni>? by about
thirteen years. It's kind o' bard to let
a man's grandad beal him. ain't it?"
Tump.T.ilsire of I ho Kurth.
The temperature of the taust of the
carib varies so much lu different places
that no fixed law has ever boen found
for thu downward increase of thc tem
pera turc, except of local application!
In the Comstock mining region thc
temperature is one degree for every
twenty-eight feet, down to 3000 feet,
in ihe north of langland ii is one dc
give for forty-nine feel: in N'ew South
Wales it is one degree for eighty feet;
in Leipsic i; is one degree for fifty-six
feet: tit (.'r iss Valley, Cal., lt Is one de
givo for b'T reel: In the copper mines
of .Michigan one degree for 'J'J4 feet.
Finding Out Ono's l<rienda.
Whether he neills it or not, every
inti ii should try lu borrow money so
as lo lear:; who Ins friends aren't, lind
also never to lend.- New York Press.
IP?TTEBS ON TROLLEYS.
"EVERY -ELECTRIC TRACTION C?M
? PANY HAS A LARGE CORPS.
"All Strangers to Euell Otlier- Aro Known
by Nun.ber Extern to Tlieir Chief anti
tn the Auditor-Watch Conductora und
"?Motormen - lt ules Governing Duties.
In al) large cities having an electric
Tailway system there is an important
branch of service which never reaches
j,the gaze of the public, states the Phil
adelphia Record. Few people have
any idea that the company pays a
number of men to ride on its cars as
passengers every hour of tue day. Thc
?jS?biect is to keep a strict watch on
Kyjs conductors and motormen for any
' ^breach of che rules. These men are
?jfc'alled inspectors by the company, but
I the employes call them "spotters."
It is not only thc passengers who
are ignorant of the identity of these
? men, hut no one connected with the
; company except the chief of the in
spectors know them. In making their
reports all the inspectors must sign
: >by numbers.
These are given then by the chief to
[use instead of their names. The chief
is not permitted to give the name of
Siny inspector to any one except the
?auditor when the payroll is made out
?each week. Another element in the
absolute secrecy of the service is the
??act that inspectors do not know each
fOther. They do not work in pairs, as
In other secret service, but each man
W.orks independent of any other along
*6ertain lines of directions given by
> \ the chief.
i The duties of these men are many
?and exacting. They must make a
fcareful study of all thc rules, regula
ions and orders of the company and
ny infringement of these must be re
ported. These include the proper and
tfolite treatment of passengers, care
ful running of the car on the part of
3the motorman in respect to cross
.Streets, pedestrians, wagons and the
Application of the power and brakes,
jj Perhaps the most important duty of
jill is to sec that all the fares are col
lected, and, what is still more import
ant, that they are all registered cor
rectly. It is this duty that requires
"tact, good judgment, an understanding
of human nature and good eyesight.
h6 inspector must keep constantly
mind the fact that the man he is
atoning may be a little sharper than
e, and any false move on his part
ould prove fatal to his usefulness on
it car. Each trip made by the in
spector must bear record on his final
'eport. Ho must give the badge mim
er of the conductor, the block number
the car, the street and lime he got
the street and time ho got off, to
ther with the register statements.
I these* facts must be kept in mern
! ory until he gets off the car, when he
ligates a record of them on his trip
?rd\
d of his day's work he must
a full 'descriptive report of any wrong
-f ?oing or accidents witnessed by him.
These reports aro given the next day
to the chief on reporting tc thc oifiec,
who in turn forwards them to the gen
eral superintendent.
After a careful reading by the su
perintendent all the men who have
been inspected and have no bad re
ports against them are given good
credit on their record. On the other
hand, if any have bad reports made
against them tho reports are placed on
file, and if any have been reported
for stealing or where a number of com
plaints of a minor nature are on file,
the man is ordered to he "specialcd."
By this is meant that on every trip
the suspected man makes in a day,
week or month, he has on ids car an
inspector. This fact shows how care
fully thc man is watched. Each in
spector who goes on a ' special" detail
is required to make a full detailed re
port, either good or bad, cf the man's
actions. If a majority of these re
ports agree as lo wrongdoing the su
perintendent makes the basis for dis
clj?linc.
The position in itself is not perma
nent, nor docs it offer any chance for
advancement. These facts are told
the applicant with emphasis on his
first interview with the cbief. A
working day consists of nine and a
half hours, with a sliding schedule
of reporting hours for every week. He
can have no holidays and very few
Sundays off. About twice a week he
starts at 4 a. m.. and on two other
|tys at 3 p. m. The other days of the
eek are means between these ex
emes. The wages of an inspector
c $2.25 per day and cash paid for
res.
Another thing to remember is that
inspector is on different divisions
2h day. His work is assigned each
y by the chief, and, as a result, he
dom rides a division more than once
month. . Of course, he cannot in
ct every car on a division in one
', but he is expected to make at
st 18 trips oe about 20 minutes
?h.
Uthough carefulness and secrecy
j the watchwords of every inspec
, the time soon comes when they
e known to the motorman and con
ictors. This may be due to some
ght indiscretion or movement on
e part of the inspectors, which has
caused the motorman or conductor to
be guarded. Descriptions soon spread
at the barn, and in about three months
new men take their places, as the
company has no more use for them.
When the cost of maintaining the
system is considered, one would think
that $20,000 a year would bc greater
j than thc amounts stolen by employes,
yet the officials say it is money well in
: vested.
Ko Eur I.nboa in .Inpun.
I Japanese haye no ear lobes. Thi?
is a discovery which has apparently
! been made for the first time by Dr.
I von 'der Heyden, director of the pub
I He hospital in Yokohama. Even if he
j is not the first io discover it, he is
! certainly the first to draw public at
tention to it.
The absence of ear lobes, he claims,
is in some respects the most marked
distinction between Japanese and Eu
ropeans, and he maintains that the
probable reason why the latter hs ve
.lobes is because their ancestors for
many generations wore very heavy
earrings.
COMPRESSED FOOD FOR CAMPERS.
Tho United ISIMMH Army Kntlon tito Mott
Snccentfnl Vet Iii ?lie S!nrk?f.
The traditional woodsman, hunter,
or trapper, who staggered under a hun
dred pounds or mere of food and
impedimental has had his burden re
duced very greatly in the past five
years. Lighter rifles and shotguns,
ammunition ot smaller calibre, and
considerably less weight for modern
rifles; thin pressed steel or aluminum
dishes which nest compactly into one
another so that not a nook or corner
is wasted; packs, baskets, and straps
of minimum weight and maximum
convenience, have all taken something
from thc grievous load the camper
used io "tote." Still more remark
able are the changes brought about
by the condensed and compressed
foods which, under one name or an
other, are for sale in all the "outing
stores."
Salt pork, cornmeal, white beans,
and tea, rei:'forced, ol' course, by fish,
game, and native fruits, the dietary
?ccommended and many a "Pocket
Guide to Hunting and Trapping," was
bulky and also heavy in proportion to
its nutritive value. Canned goods un
til recently took up practically as
much room as thc same articles in
their natural state, and there was
little gain in buying them, except for
boat cr canoe trips 7/hen there was
plenty of space-.
Canned soups of the standard
brands were put up ready to serve
without dilution, and the only portable
substitutes were the time-honored
"soup cakes" of the kind used in the
"Swiss Family Robinson." As soon as
tho idea was conceived of manufactur
ing something between these two ex
tremes, it was taken up by several
makers. The condensed soups of to
day are thick and require to be mixed
with several times their bulk of water,
but they have not been boiled down so
far as to sacrifice their flavor and deli
cacy.
Experiments in the way of "food
tablets" have met with varied results.
A large firm of packers once adver
tised a compressed tabloid of meat
anJ various vegetables, dried and
closely pressed so as to keep, in thc
language of advertisements, "for years
in any climate." The trouble with
this particular viand was that it did
not taste good.
Thc United States government in
its experiments with the army's food
supply, has incidentally accomplished
a great deal for the camper's benefit.
Tho regular emergency ration is per
haps the most, successful prparation
of its kind on the market. A square
tin can, no larger than the ordinary
pint fruit can, is suppose to contain
three meals, not hearty repasts, how
ever, for a really hungry man. There
is a packet of tea inside the can, an
other packet of seasoning, and a solid
lump of a mixture of a partly dried
meat with vegetables. Tho. adaptabil
ffTlrtM??WW??M ?f? '"""'ous purposes
5BSB RrolfilWEoffl? 'Mix-'e'ct with
water to the consistency o? a thick
paste and brown in a pan, it becomes
hasli. Thinned with a trifle less water
it can bc shaped into balls or flat cakes
and fried as Hamburg steak. Stirred
up with a larger proportion of water,
a savory stew is the result.
Seve r;1 of thc packing and canning
firms 1. o put on the market recenty
an assortment of flat cans containing
a l the staple meat and fish products,
practically without juice, in the cans,
und squeezed into, the smallest pos
sible compass. Thc flat can is a con
venience for packing which the mak
ers sera to be slow in appreciating.
At thc opposite extreme from the
pork and beans are the malted-milk
tablets and similar preparations which
supply nutriment in its least compass
but do not pretend to take the place
of thc regular diet for healthy persons
doing active work. Druggists testify
to the extensive use of these in place
of noonday luncheon by business men
of poor digestion and neverous tem
perament, but they are not to bc con
sidered in supplying the woodsman's
pack.
Polite, Though Needy.
"Excuse, me," said a shabby-looking
man as he wai ked up to a cadaverous
looking stranger, "but may I ask you
for a bit of information?" "Certainly,
you may," said the stranger, and the
shabby-looking man smiled pleasantly.
"And you will not consider me at all
impertinent, will you?" "Not in the
least," said the stranger. "And it will
net be taking too much of your timo?"
"Oh, no." Ey this time the stranger was
becoming a little vexed, but the shab
bily dressed fellow was apparently in
the best of spirit. "No doubt you are a
resident, of this city?" in a questioning
tone. "But what can I do for you, what
information do you seek?" asked the
vexed stranger. "Well, you see," said
the shabby man, "you will
pardon me, but I am a stranger here.
In fact I have just arrived. Now you
will please excuse me for taking up so
much of your time, but as I said be
fore I have just arrived here and am
a perfect stranger here." "What it is
you wanted to ask about?" said the
listener with a show of impatience.
"Well, you see," the man replied, "I
hope you will not think it impertinent
in me to ask if you are in a condition
at this time to give me some little as
sistance in a financial way for-" "No,
I am not." was the blunt reply. "Then
you will excuse me," said the polite
beggar, "and I'll not ask you to do it
for fear of embarrassing you," and
the shabby man bowed and smiled, and
walked down th:- street.-New Orleans
Times-Democrat.
(Immpinn Pnbv Mnbn Troilor.
I think that my baby boy. Francis
Crasg. holds thc record for traveling.
Ho was horn Jan. 1, 1001. On April
30, 1901, he left London for Liverpool,
then New York, Philadelphia, Boston,
Buffalo, Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas
City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Hon
olulu, Pago-pago, Auckland, N. Z., Syd
ney. Australia, Melbourne, Adelaide,
Hobart, Tasmania. Dunedin. N. Z.,
Christchurch, Wellington, Auckland,
back to Sydney. Brisbane, Queensland,
Melbourne, Adelaide. Fremantle. Col
ombo. Suez. Port Said. Naples, Mar
seilles, Gibraltar, Plymouth, arrived in
london June 21. 1002. just nine days
before he was 18 months old. ami he
hud traveled 33.850 miles-London
Daily Hail
fl
m
Large shipments of th ? best makes of wagons
md buggies just received. Our stock of JurnU 0 \
ture and house furnishing is complete.
Large Stock of Coffins and Caskets
alwags or hand. All calls for our hearse prompt
ly responded to. All goods sold on a small mar
gin of profit. Call to se3 me, I will save you
money.
G. P. C
Joli, s. c.
THE ARTISTS5 FAVORITE
THE MATCHLESS
rsi
Unsurpassed in touch, tone, workmanship and dura
rabilily. ' Sold on
TERMS
T.
Factory and Wartrooi, feiiati, Ol.
J. A. HOLLAND,
Traveling Agent for South Carolina,
NINETY-SIX, S. C.
W. J. RUTHERFORD.
R. B. MORRIS.
MANUFACTURERS OF
?J
s in Gement, Plaster,
Hi, fire DIM, nre uiay,
Ready Boofing^ami Other Material.
WRITE US FOR PRICES
Cir. fiiiiis ai Mulm Sis., . ispsli, Gt
BUILTM/NG MEW
Oil RE PAIRING .
You'll Need Our PAINT !
For it is tho only kind you or any one else should think of using.
We can match your ideas in OOLOilS, satisfy your wishes in
QUALITY and you'll find our PBC??S are not so high as to be ex
travagant uor so low 'that perfection can't go with them. AU mail
orders will receive prompt attention. ?
-<3?>?
'Conner & Schweers Paint Co.
841 BROAD STREET,
AUGUSTA,
GEORGIA i
Carleton's Treasury.
A Valuable Hand-Book of.
General Information,
A Condensed Encyclopedia
Universal Knowledge,
Being a Hoferonco Book Upon Nearly Every Sabjcot That Can be Thoofht 94
Containing, in a Condensed Form, Wh*fc Can Otherwise be Learned Oalj
From a Great Many Large Enoyolopedias, Dictionaries, Kt?.
Including, Among Other Important Subjects, Whole Chapters Upe?
AOTROI?O?CY,
GEOLOGY,
MINRRAI-OOT,
OaKUIBTBT,
WJIOTniOITT,
YKQETIDLE OMITIO?,
VINS ARTt.
Jt/RISrR?DB?fCa,
ANCIENT HISTORY,
ANIMAL CHEATIOH,
CKROXOlOaV,
UTKK ATUKl,
G2O0RAJTTT.
BKOUSH LTTCHATTma,
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